Campaigns on Both Sides of Public Campaign Finance Agree: Race Remains Too Close to Call

The initial returns for Measure 26-108, Portland’s test of public support to continue public campaign financing,
suggest the city’s five-year experiment with giving tax dollars to
candidates for mayor, city commissioner and auditor is likely to end.

But both opponents and supporters of the measure say tonight that it’s too early to declare victory or defeat.

Just after 8 pm the first results showed 53 percent of voters whose
ballots had been counted favored dumping the program that brought
Portlanders Commissioner Amanda Fritz. The first-term City Hall occupant (pictured above) has said she wouldn’t have run without public campaign financing.

The latest results at 10 pm show the race has tightened, but they
still put the “No” side in the winning position—with 52 percent.

As she was leaving County Commissioner-elect Loretta Smith’s victory
party on the 23rd floor of the Portland Hilton Hotel tonight around 10
pm, Fritz said she didn’t know how the race would end. But she said she
sensed voters were “cranky,” especially when it comes to money matters
like public campaign financing. (In five years, the Portland experiment
has cost taxpayers almost $2 million.)

Jon Coney, spokesman for Portlanders Against Taxpayer Funded
Political Campaigns, agreed with Fritz that the race could still swing
either way.

Fund-raising in this campaign wasn’t as close as the election results so far. Supporters of publicly funded political campaigns outspent opponents more than 5 to 1 with $350,000 compared with $66,000 for the “No” side.